The Week In The US : Disappointing Qrowth

 | Feb 02, 2014 05:49AM ET

There was a lot to digest this week, but at least no surprise came from the Fed that announced another USD 10 bn decrease in monthly security purchases. US bond markets are weathering quite well the tapering, which tends to support the hypothesis that they finally got that tapering is not tightening and that it is disconnected from the policy rate.

As stressed several times by Fed officials, even if QE3 is progressively winded down, the Fed keeps on providing extra accommodation every month. Taking into account that some strong headwinds have abated, especially the fiscal drag at the federal level, hopes are allowed that this will be sufficient to support the nascent acceleration.

This week data were not that encouraging, though. Admittedly, GDP growth was in line with our expectations of a limited slowdown (from 4.1% in Q3 to 3.2% in Q4, annualised quarterly rate), but the breakdown of demand was both surprising and source of some concern. In Q3, the pace of increase in activity was artificially lifted by a massive contribution from the inventory change, and we were expecting a pay-back in Q4. It however did not materialise, as inventories kept on increasing, bringing a small but positive contribution where we were expecting a negative reading. On top of that, international trade made a, impressive positive contribution of 1.3 pp as imports were almost flat and exports surged.

This left the final domestic demand much less buoyant than we had expected. The main drag came from another decline in spending from the federal government, and a marked decline in residential investment, probably linked with heightened mortgage rates, a downward trend likely to extend into early 2014 as pending home sales plunged 8.7% in December. On a more positive note, business spending on equipment rebounded, and households once more saved the day with their consumption. But prospects for those two major components of demand are not that steady. Without a substantial improvement in labour market conditions, a clear acceleration of consumption seems hard to achieve, while the latest data for business spending on equipment were rather disappointing, as new orders for non-defence capital goods excluding aircraft fell by 1.3% m/m in December.

Additionally, the trend in prices is not comforting at all. The GDP deflator was up 1.4% y/y, the same rate as over the previous two quarters. But going two-digit, we can spot a deceleration from 1.44% in Q2 to 1.38% in Q4. The deflator for consumption is particularly worrying. The price index for durable goods is down, but this is no cause of concern as it is the component that is the most impacted by the “quality effect” (even if the price of a car is not going down, the fact that it now comes with air conditioning makes it more valuable, and this leads to a decrease in the price index). But the index for non-durable goods just entered the negative zone, a first since the end of the recession, while services prices are decelerating.

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